China Daily (Hong Kong)

Charcoal exports bring about increasing revenue for Cuba

-

MATANZAS, Cuba — Under a pounding sun, a group of men, armed with chain saws, cut down the trees at an old citrus plantation in a plain in western Cuba, previously known for its high production of oranges, grapefruit and lemons.

An invasion of the Huanglongb­ing plague, also known as a citrus greening disease, forced authoritie­s to demolish large areas planted with citrus in the state-run Victoria de Giron Agroindust­rial Company, located in the municipali­ty of Jaguey Grande, 140 kilometers southeast of Havana.

Losing the plantation was not the only problem for the company, which also had to face having a large volume of cut wood that remained on the fields without ever being put to use.

The decision of the managers was to start using this wood waste in the production of coal, a product that has historical­ly been developed by in the area.

workers

They have joined the ranks of company personnel and sell their entire coal production to the company itself, through a beneficial contract.

“The work is hard but you get used to it,” said one of the farmers, Alexis Macias, who has been a woodcutter since 1993 but now also produces coal.

He received everything he needs for the job for free, from the chain saw to the sacks and the strings to tie them up, and in exchange he sold between 3 and 4 tons of coal every month to the company.

Today his monthly income is more than before, which may increase depending on the quality of his production.

The process of cutting firewood and coal processing involves some 600 farmers from Jaguey Grande and four other municipali­ties near the area where the company is located. Last year, they exported some 3,500 tons of coal to Turkey and Canada.

The gradual exhaustion of the debris from the demolished citrus plantation­s has not been an impediment to the work of the farmers, who now focus their attention on the dense marabou forests, an invasive tree of the Mimosaceae family that covers Cuban fields.

Now 95 percent of the coal in the area is made with the marabou as raw material and only 5 percent, comes from the citrus waste.

That coal is sold under the “Cubanita” brand for $350 a ton, with a higher quality.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China